Crime and Punishment by Fyodor Dostoyevsky (rom com books to read TXT) ๐
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- Author: Fyodor Dostoyevsky
Read book online ยซCrime and Punishment by Fyodor Dostoyevsky (rom com books to read TXT) ๐ยป. Author - Fyodor Dostoyevsky
โHe lets others come to it.โ
โNo, no! God will protect her, God!โ she repeated beside herself.
โBut, perhaps, there is no God at all,โ Raskolnikov answered with a sort of malignance, laughed and looked at her.
Soniaโs face suddenly changed; a tremor passed over it. She looked at him with unutterable reproach, tried to say something, but could not speak and broke into bitter, bitter sobs, hiding her face in her hands.
โYou say Katerina Ivanovnaโs mind is unhinged; your own mind is unhinged,โ he said after a brief silence.
Five minutes passed. He still paced up and down the room in silence, not looking at her. At last he went up to her; his eyes glittered. He put his two hands on her shoulders and looked straight into her tearful face. His eyes were hard, feverish and piercing, his lips were twitching. All at once he bent down quickly and dropping to the ground, kissed her foot. Sonia drew back from him as from a madman. And certainly he looked like a madman.
โWhat are you doing to me?โ she muttered, turning pale, and a sudden anguish clutched at her heart.
He stood up at once.
โI did not bow down to you, I bowed down to all the suffering of humanity,โ he said wildly and walked away to the window. โListen,โ he added, turning to her a minute later. โI said just now to an insolent man that he was not worth your little finger... and that I did my sister honour making her sit beside you.โ
โAch, you said that to them! And in her presence?โ cried Sonia, frightened. โSit down with me! An honour! Why, Iโm... dishonourable.... Ah, why did you say that?โ
โIt was not because of your dishonour and your sin I said that of you, but because of your great suffering. But you are a great sinner, thatโs true,โ he added almost solemnly, โand your worst sin is that you have destroyed and betrayed yourself for nothing. Isnโt that fearful? Isnโt it fearful that you are living in this filth which you loathe so, and at the same time you know yourself (youโve only to open your eyes) that you are not helping anyone by it, not saving anyone from anything? Tell me,โ he went on almost in a frenzy, โhow this shame and degradation can exist in you side by side with other, opposite, holy feelings? It would be better, a thousand times better and wiser to leap into the water and end it all!โ
โBut what would become of them?โ Sonia asked faintly, gazing at him with eyes of anguish, but not seeming surprised at his suggestion.
Raskolnikov looked strangely at her. He read it all in her face; so she must have had that thought already, perhaps many times, and earnestly she had thought out in her despair how to end it and so earnestly, that now she scarcely wondered at his suggestion. She had not even noticed the cruelty of his words. (The significance of his reproaches and his peculiar attitude to her shame she had, of course, not noticed either, and that, too, was clear to him.) But he saw how monstrously the thought of her disgraceful, shameful position was torturing her and had long tortured her. โWhat, what,โ he thought, โcould hitherto have hindered her from putting an end to it?โ Only then he realised what those poor little orphan children and that pitiful half-crazy Katerina Ivanovna, knocking her head against the wall in her consumption, meant for Sonia.
But, nevertheless, it was clear to him again that with her character and the amount of education she had after all received, she could not in any case remain so. He was still confronted by the question, how could she have remained so long in that position without going out of her mind, since she could not bring herself to jump into the water? Of course he knew that Soniaโs position was an exceptional case, though unhappily not unique and not infrequent, indeed; but that very exceptionalness, her tinge of education, her previous life might, one would have thought, have killed her at the first step on that revolting path. What held her upโsurely not depravity? All that infamy had obviously only touched her mechanically, not one drop of real depravity had penetrated to her heart; he saw that. He saw through her as she stood before him....
โThere are three ways before her,โ he thought, โthe canal, the madhouse, or... at last to sink into depravity which obscures the mind and turns the heart to stone.โ
The last idea was the most revolting, but he was a sceptic, he was young, abstract, and therefore cruel, and so he could not help believing that the last end was the most likely.
โBut can that be true?โ he cried to himself. โCan that creature who has still preserved the purity of her spirit be consciously drawn at last into that sink of filth and iniquity? Can the process already have begun? Can it be that she has only been able to bear it till now, because vice has begun to be less loathsome to her? No, no, that cannot be!โ he cried, as Sonia had just before. โNo, what has kept her from the canal till now is the idea of sin and they, the children.... And if she has not gone out of her mind... but who says she has not gone out of her mind? Is she in her senses? Can one talk, can one reason as she does? How can she sit on the edge of the abyss of loathsomeness into which she is slipping and refuse to listen when she is told of danger? Does she expect a miracle? No doubt she does. Doesnโt that all mean madness?โ
He stayed obstinately at that thought. He liked that explanation indeed better than any other. He began looking more intently at her.
โSo you pray to God a great deal, Sonia?โ he asked her.
Sonia did not speak; he stood beside her waiting for an answer.
โWhat should I be without God?โ she whispered rapidly, forcibly, glancing at him with suddenly flashing eyes, and squeezing his hand.
โAh, so that is it!โ he thought.
โAnd what does God do for you?โ he asked, probing her further.
Sonia was silent a long while, as though she could not answer. Her weak chest kept heaving with emotion.
โBe silent! Donโt ask! You donโt deserve!โ she cried suddenly, looking sternly and wrathfully at him.
โThatโs it, thatโs it,โ he repeated to himself.
โHe does everything,โ she whispered quickly, looking down again.
โThatโs the way out! Thatโs the explanation,โ he decided, scrutinising her with eager curiosity, with a new, strange, almost morbid feeling. He gazed at that pale, thin, irregular, angular little face, those soft blue eyes, which could flash with such fire, such stern energy, that little body still shaking with indignation and angerโand it all seemed to him more and more strange, almost impossible. โShe is a religious maniac!โ he repeated to himself.
There was a book lying on the chest of drawers. He had noticed it every time he paced up and down the room. Now he took it up and looked at it. It
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